Saturday, 21 May 2016

Farewell to Alan Young (1919-2016) that engaging actor whose many roles on stage, film and television include Wilbur Post, the klutzy owner of a loquacious Palomino horse in one of the wackiest of the goofy '60s TV sitcoms Mister Ed (1961-66) and, later, the voice of Disney's Scrooge McDuck in Mickey's Christmas Carol and numerous TV animations.

Anyone thesp who can share the screen with a talking horse without being totally upstaged and can speak like a stingy Scottish duck is, surely, an actor with genuine talent!

Friday, 13 May 2016

Since 13 May 2006 this blog has featured 1920 posts (including this one) and received 9368 published comments –– thanks to YOU!!

It is true that recently I have been somewhat seduced away from blogging by that coy mistress, Facebook, but I still enjoy
coming back here, once in a while, where so many weird and wonderful, delightful and dubious things have been celebrated and where, over
the years, so many friendships have been made!

Friday, 6 May 2016

Today would have been the 100th birthday of a very special lady who, for several years, I called a friend...

Her name was Adriana Caselotti (1916-1997) and although it never appeared on the film's credits, she was the speaking and singing voice for Snow White in Walt Disney's classic, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

Rather
than retell Adriana's extraordinary story, I am going to let you hear it from the lady
herself in an archive recording of a long-distance, virtual-interview
which I conducted in June 1987 while researching for the book Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs: The Making of the Classic Film which I wrote in collaboration with Richard Holliss to mark Miss White's 50th birthday.

I
mailed my questions to Adriana and she answered them onto tape. The
quality isn't great: it was recorded in a very echoey acoustic and there
are one or two amusing stops and starts (and a few inaccurate answers!)
but it gives a good idea of what a fascinating person she was.

As you
will quickly deduce, she was something of an eccentric, but she was –
once you became acclimatised to the near-exhausting enthusiasm – an
utterly charming and adorable person. I loved her dearly...

Alas, she never did visit England, but I
visited Los Angeles and got to meet her in person at her extraordinary
Polynesian style home (with an anachronistic wishing well and a
Japanese bridge in the garden!). I knew I was in for an experience when she
answered the door-phone as Snow White telling Grumpy: 'Brian's at the door!' and
singing 'I'm Wishing'!

On
the subject of singing, here's another unique
recording for you: the seventy-year-old Adriana singing six karaoke
numbers that she recorded
in November 1986: 'Bésame Mucho', 'Strangers in the Night', 'Harbor
Lights', 'Autumn Leaves', Beyond the Reef' (both vocals!) and 'I Left My
Heart in San Francisco'. This recording concludes with 'I'm Wishing',
from Snow White, recorded (as she explained in the interview
above) for the Fantasyland Wishing Well in Disneyland in 1983, when she
was age sixty-seven...

I
corresponded with Adriana up until the end of her life and made a
number of memorable visits to see her, by myself or with dear friends –
on various occasions, Richard and Chris, Muir, Michael and Malcolm – all
of whom shared my affection for this wonderful character...

Every visit was commemorated with some keepsake of our friendship...

Finally, here's The Fairest of Them All – a vintage BBC radio feature marking Snow White's 50th
anniversary that I wrote and presented on the BBC
World Service programme strand, Meridian on 8 December 1987...

And
if you're not snowed-up by now, you can read the story of the making of
this iconic film on today's post over on my sister blog, Decidedly Disney.